UAE at 50: Aviation industry flies towards sustainable and tech-driven growth

    30 Nov 2021

    The UAE’s aviation industry has soared to great heights since the country welcomed its first travellers in the 1960s, developing over the decades into a global powerhouse for air connectivity and standing in the post-COVID era at the cusp of a changing landscape with plans for sustainable and technology-driven future growth.

    The local aviation industry’s development over the decades, starting with a sand-compacted runway in Dubai International Airport in 1960 and the first flights of Emirates airline with two wet-leased aircraft in 1985, has transformed the nation from a fishing and pearl-diving spot into a global center for air transport.

    The sector contributes to about 13% of the UAE’s GDP, both directly and indirectly.

    “The development of the UAE as a global aviation powerhouse started with a bold vision in the 1960s Collaboration. Careful planning and open competition have played a key role in the rise as a global aviation hub over the past few decades,” said Linus Bauer, founder and managing director of Bauer Aviation Advisory, The National News reports.

    The UAE’s rise as a modern center connecting East and West is a story of globalization and an ambitious bet on the future of air travel as the nation celebrates its Golden Jubilee on December 2.

    Over a series of milestones, Dubai transformed from a little-known desert airfield to a global airport connecting far-flung corners of the globe. Driving its success is the UAE’s strategic location between Europe and Asia within an eight-hour flight radius of two-thirds of the world’s population, operating a pre-pandemic network of 240 destinations and home to the world’s largest long-haul airline Emirates.

    Enabling the ease of decision-making and mapping out the larger picture, Sheikh Ahmed bin Saeed Al Maktoum is the airline’s chairman and also runs the airport operator, as well as the aviation regulator.

    In its aggressive pursuit for growth, Dubai International has retained its title of the world’s busiest airport by international passengers for seven years, as the emirate developed into a center for transcontinental traffic between America and Europe with Asia.

    The aviation industry has been a vital pillar of the UAE’s economy and a driver of business activity, contributing about 13% to the national gross domestic product, while boosting related sectors from hospitality to trade. It is now home to six national airlines ranging from low-cost to full-service operators.

    “The aviation sector has been an essential factor behind the transformation of the UAE economy since the 1980s and its development into a regional and then global service hub,” said Monica Malik, chief economist at Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank. “This is not only the direct contribution of the sector but also its role in developing areas such as tourism, hospitality, logistics and trade, and finance.”

    Dubai took a long-term strategic decision to diversify its economy in the 1980s, focusing on developing its aerospace sector as part of a push to boost its non-oil revenue, transform the city into a business center, create jobs, and attract tourists. Open skies policies, significant investment in infrastructure, and a foreign, investor-friendly business environment have spurred the development of the aviation industry.

    Hand in hand with the development of the sector, Dubai has spent billions of dirhams on new attractions and eased visa rules to enable the arrival of more tourists, remote workers and high-skilled talent.

    In a forward-looking strategy, the UAE sought to become part of the aerospace supply chain, rather than only a customer of billion-dollar aircraft orders placed with the world’s biggest plane makers.

    Based in Al Ain, Mubadala Investment Company’s aerospace manufacturing unit, became the Arabian Gulf’s first producer of composite aircraft parts and is a key part of the UAE’s economic diversification and local industrialization plan. It started operations in 2010 and now makes components for jet wings from the Boeing 777X empennage ribs to the Airbus A350 flap support fairings.

    “The UAE government created a well-articulated strategy that included various strategic projects that were implemented right across the full aviation-related value chain,” said Andre Martins, a partner in the Middle East and Africa transport and services practice at Oliver Wyman.

    The UAE has also invested more widely into smart transport. For example, the DP World-backed Virgin Hyperloop high-tech travel system will carry passengers and freight via floating pods in vacuum tubes at speeds of more than 1,000kph.

    The UAE’s dynamic aviation sector will help accelerate the country’s continuing economic recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic as it brings in more tourists, investors, workers and expatriates to the leisure and business center of the region.

    “The airlines and sector will be central to the ongoing recovery of the UAE from the pandemic. We are seeing more routes returning and more planes,” Ms. Malik said. “Going forward, the focus will likely be on working with their partners towards a greener and more fuel-efficient aviation sector.”

    Environmental sustainability has been a top priority for local airlines such as Abu Dhabi’s Etihad Airways, that announced its target of net-zero carbon by 2050 nearly two years ago.

    Etihad, which has been focused on its fleet of GEnX-powered Boeing 787’s under its Greenliner sustainability program, will now include the Rolls-Royce XWB-powered Airbus A350 fleet. The first of Etihad’s A350s, launched at the air show as the “Sustainability50”, marks the airline’s commitment to the 2050 target of net-zero carbon emissions.

    Local airlines have adopted the latest technology to restart travel safely, cut queues and minimize human contact through the use of face recognition, biometrics and touchless points at airports.

    “Embracing open competition and focusing on reopening and connecting markets through efficient operations in a safe way are keys for Abu Dhabi and Dubai to emerge stronger as global aviation hubs in the post-pandemic era,” Mr. Bauer said.

    While the face of the UAE’s aviation industry has changed dramatically over the past 50 years, the coming decades promise more developments in sustainability, technology and business models to keep up with the changes in air travel.

    “In 50 years from now, the aviation industry will be very different,” Mr. Martins said.

    “There will be many new technologies, innovative business models will emerge; airports and ground handling will be fully automated; travel will be seamless and more enjoyable; aircraft will be green, with completely different seat configurations and experiences; new emerging start-ups will appear to control travel end-to-end with hyper-customization of offers using the power of predictive analytics,” he said.

    “People will have different lifestyles living and commuting more often between different places, faster, easier and cheaper than today.”

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    You may read about the future of electric aviation and sustainable aviation fuel here.

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